Class Reunion: The Remaking of the American White Working ClassRoutledge, 2005 M01 15 - 232 pages Noted scholar Lois Weis first visited the town of "Freeway" in her 1990 book, Working Class Without Work. In that book we met the students and teachers of Freeway's high school to understand how these working-class folks made sense of their lives. Now, fifteen years later, Weis has gone back to Freeway for Class Reunion. This time her focus is on the now grown-up students who are, for the most part, still working class and now struggling to survive the challenges of the global economy. Class Reunion is a rare and valuable longitudinal ethnographic study that provides powerful, provocative insight into how the lives of these men and women have changed over the last two decades--and what their prospects might be for the future. |
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Page xi
... was nothing to replace the school — no social and youth services, no respectable jobs, no alternative forms of education; just the realities of the oppressive economic conditions that are even Series Editor's Introduction.
... was nothing to replace the school — no social and youth services, no respectable jobs, no alternative forms of education; just the realities of the oppressive economic conditions that are even Series Editor's Introduction.
Page xiii
... youth (e.g., Willis, 1981) showed the integral relationship between class and masculinity. Class Reunion recasts this and demonstrates that changes in men's and women's working lives have had very real, indeed sometimes even momentous ...
... youth (e.g., Willis, 1981) showed the integral relationship between class and masculinity. Class Reunion recasts this and demonstrates that changes in men's and women's working lives have had very real, indeed sometimes even momentous ...
Page 4
... youth culture (Arnot, 2002, 2004), and certainly must be given credit for this, he, like Gorz, concretizes the working class in terms of its relationship with wage labor, wherein the male wage packet becomes the primary means of self ...
... youth culture (Arnot, 2002, 2004), and certainly must be given credit for this, he, like Gorz, concretizes the working class in terms of its relationship with wage labor, wherein the male wage packet becomes the primary means of self ...
Page 14
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Page 15
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Contents
Young Men at Freeway High | 23 |
Young Women at Freeway High | 51 |
We Meet the Men Again | 73 |
Those Men Who Stay | 87 |
Picking Up the Pieces and Moving Forward | 143 |
Methods and Reflections | 185 |
References | 201 |
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